Lead carbide officially does not exist (indeed lead is believed to be one of the few metals that do not form carbide). Attempts to obtain it by combining Pb and C directly or by pyrolysis of organinc Pd salts have met with failure.
Yet those failures may mean only that lead carbide is unstable and decomposes below 200-300 C. Indeed there are a couple of dubious reports of a lead acetylide PbC
2 being formed at lower temperatures:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_carbideI wonder if there has been any followup on those reports?
One of the reports claims that a micron-thin layer of PbC
2 was detected at the interface between graphite and a Pb-Bi alloy after very slow cooling. Which might be perhaps the result of trace amounts of some C-containing gas reacting with solid Pb?
The other alleged route, from calcium acetylide CaC
2 + Pb salt, is dubious because CaC
2 is decomposed by water into Ca(OH)
2 and acetylene, which does not ionize. (Could the "lead carbide" thus formed be just a calcium/lead hydoxide or something of the sort?)
Yet, I wonder whether there is any polar but aprotic solvent (like propylene carbonate) that will dissolve CaC
2 or some other acetylide as a salt Ca
2+ + C
22-, without formation of acetylene; even if only in trace amounts. That may be enough to test the second PbC
2 claim.
If an unstable lead acetylide does exist, could be formed by electro- or photoexcitation of gaseous mixtures of acetylene and volatile organometallic Pb compounds?